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orn in 1970, digital artist
Jack Riggen, a long-time resident of Northern California, represents a
new breed of emerging artists who have cut their creative teeth using a
computer as their primary medium. With no significant artistic training
or education (but plenty of computer savvy), jaxun began "pushing pixels"
in 1993 using an IBM-compatible personal computer and a pressure-sensitive
"graphics tablet."
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s a computer graphics hobbyist,
jaxun has continued to publish an exhibit of his 200+ works on the World
Wide Web, where thousands of visitors have been able to peruse his
art since 1994. In mid-1997, jaxun began considering the pursuit of a fine
art career, and has since been developing a portfolio representing a consistent
body of unique abstract images to present to galleries and private collectors.
Completion of a fine art degree and continued self-publication are among
jaxun's immediate goals as an artist.
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ere you will find a selection of images available
as high-quality digital fine art prints. Jaxun has these prints made
by Robyn Color of San Francisco, using the amazing Lightjet 5000.
This digital photo printer renders images directly from the original digital file to photo paper (on Fuji Crystal Archive paper, with prints up to 50" by 50" possible) using red, green, and blue lasers for the finest, most archivable digital print available. These prints are truly continuous tone reproductions which must be seen to be believed! Because the printer renders the image in the same colorspace (RGB) as the images were created, collectors will be assured the print will look the same as the on-screen version you see here, and the colors will stay brilliant for a lifetime! Based on the combination of his unique style and background, and sale of high quality reproductions, jaxun hopes to one day be recognized as a pioneer in the realm of digital fine art. |
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